1 ;;; ls-lisp.el --- emulate insert-directory completely in Emacs Lisp
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1992, 1994, 2000-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 ;; Author: Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
6 ;; Modified by: Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>
7 ;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
8 ;; Keywords: unix, dired
11 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
13 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
14 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
15 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
16 ;; (at your option) any later version.
18 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
19 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
20 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
21 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
23 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
24 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
28 ;; OVERVIEW ==========================================================
30 ;; This file advises the function `insert-directory' to implement it
31 ;; directly from Emacs lisp, without running ls in a subprocess.
32 ;; This is useful if you don't have ls installed (ie, on MS Windows).
34 ;; This function can use regexps instead of shell wildcards. If you
35 ;; enter regexps remember to double each $ sign. For example, to
36 ;; include files *.el, enter `.*\.el$$', resulting in the regexp
39 ;; RESTRICTIONS ======================================================
41 ;; * A few obscure ls switches are still ignored: see the docstring of
42 ;; `insert-directory'.
44 ;; TO DO =============================================================
46 ;; Complete handling of F switch (if/when possible).
48 ;; FJW: May be able to sort much faster by consing the sort key onto
49 ;; the front of each list element, sorting and then stripping the key
54 ;; Written originally by Sebastian Kremer <sk@thp.uni-koeln.de>
55 ;; Revised by Andrew Innes and Geoff Volker (and maybe others).
57 ;; Modified by Francis J. Wright <F.J.Wright@maths.qmw.ac.uk>, mainly
58 ;; to support many more ls options, "platform emulation" and more
64 "Emulate the ls program completely in Emacs Lisp."
68 (defun ls-lisp-set-options ()
69 "Reset the ls-lisp options that depend on `ls-lisp-emulation'."
70 (mapc 'custom-reevaluate-setting
71 '(ls-lisp-ignore-case ls-lisp-dirs-first ls-lisp-verbosity
)))
73 (defcustom ls-lisp-emulation
74 (cond ;; ((eq system-type 'windows-nt) 'MS-Windows)
75 ((memq system-type
'(hpux usg-unix-v irix berkeley-unix
))
76 'UNIX
)) ; very similar to GNU
77 ;; Anything else defaults to nil, meaning GNU.
78 "Platform to emulate: GNU (default), MacOS, MS-Windows, UNIX.
79 Corresponding value is one of: nil, `MacOS', `MS-Windows', `UNIX'.
80 Set this to your preferred value; it need not match the actual platform
83 This variable does not affect the behavior of ls-lisp directly.
84 Rather, it controls the default values for some variables that do:
85 `ls-lisp-ignore-case', `ls-lisp-dirs-first', and `ls-lisp-verbosity'.
87 If you change this variable directly (without using customize)
88 after loading `ls-lisp', you should use `ls-lisp-set-options' to
89 update the dependent variables."
90 :type
'(choice (const :tag
"GNU" nil
)
94 :initialize
'custom-initialize-default
95 :set
(lambda (symbol value
)
96 (unless (equal value
(eval symbol
))
97 (custom-set-default symbol value
)
98 (ls-lisp-set-options)))
101 ;; Only made an obsolete alias in 23.3. Before that, the initial
102 ;; value was set according to:
103 ;; (or (memq ls-lisp-emulation '(MS-Windows MacOS))
104 ;; (and (boundp 'ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case) ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case))
105 ;; Which isn't the right thing to do.
106 (define-obsolete-variable-alias 'ls-lisp-dired-ignore-case
107 'ls-lisp-ignore-case
"21.1")
109 (defcustom ls-lisp-ignore-case
110 (memq ls-lisp-emulation
'(MS-Windows MacOS
))
111 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp alphabetic sorting to ignore case."
112 :set-after
'(ls-lisp-emulation)
116 (defcustom ls-lisp-dirs-first
(eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MS-Windows
)
117 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp to sort directories first in any ordering.
118 \(Or last if it is reversed.) Follows Microsoft Windows Explorer."
119 ;; Functionality suggested by Chris McMahan <cmcmahan@one.net>
120 :set-after
'(ls-lisp-emulation)
124 (defcustom ls-lisp-verbosity
125 (cond ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MacOS
) nil
)
126 ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'MS-Windows
)
127 (if (and (fboundp 'w32-using-nt
) (w32-using-nt))
128 '(links))) ; distinguish NT/2K from 9x
129 ((eq ls-lisp-emulation
'UNIX
) '(links uid
)) ; UNIX ls
130 (t '(links uid gid
))) ; GNU ls
131 "A list of optional file attributes that ls-lisp should display.
132 It should contain none or more of the symbols: links, uid, gid.
133 A value of nil (or an empty list) means display none of them.
135 Concepts come from UNIX: `links' means count of names associated with
136 the file; `uid' means user (owner) identifier; `gid' means group
139 If emulation is MacOS then default is nil;
140 if emulation is MS-Windows then default is `(links)' if platform is
141 Windows NT/2K, nil otherwise;
142 if emulation is UNIX then default is `(links uid)';
143 if emulation is GNU then default is `(links uid gid)'."
144 :set-after
'(ls-lisp-emulation)
145 ;; Functionality suggested by Howard Melman <howard@silverstream.com>
146 :type
'(set (const :tag
"Show Link Count" links
)
147 (const :tag
"Show User" uid
)
148 (const :tag
"Show Group" gid
))
151 (defcustom ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
152 (not (memq system-type
'(ms-dos windows-nt
)))
153 "Non-nil causes ls-lisp to revert back to using `insert-directory-program'.
154 This is useful on platforms where ls-lisp is dumped into Emacs, such as
155 Microsoft Windows, but you would still like to use a program to list
156 the contents of a directory."
160 ;;; Autoloaded because it is let-bound in `recover-session', `mail-recover-1'.
162 (defcustom ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards t
163 "Non-nil means ls-lisp treats file patterns as shell wildcards.
164 Otherwise they are treated as Emacs regexps (for backward compatibility)."
168 (defcustom ls-lisp-format-time-list
171 "List of `format-time-string' specs to display file time stamps.
172 These specs are used ONLY if a valid locale can not be determined.
174 If `ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format' is non-nil, these specs are used
175 regardless of whether the locale can be determined.
177 Syntax: (EARLY-TIME-FORMAT OLD-TIME-FORMAT)
179 The EARLY-TIME-FORMAT is used if file has been modified within the
180 current year. The OLD-TIME-FORMAT is used for older files. To use ISO
181 8601 dates, you could set:
183 \(setq ls-lisp-format-time-list
186 :type
'(list (string :tag
"Early time format")
187 (string :tag
"Old time format"))
190 (defcustom ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format nil
191 "Non-nil means to always use `ls-lisp-format-time-list' for time stamps.
192 This applies even if a valid locale is specified.
194 WARNING: Using localized date/time format might cause Dired columns
195 to fail to line up, e.g. if month names are not all of the same length."
199 (defvar ls-lisp-uid-d-fmt
"-%d"
200 "Format to display integer UIDs.")
201 (defvar ls-lisp-uid-s-fmt
"-%s"
202 "Format to display user names.")
203 (defvar ls-lisp-gid-d-fmt
"-%d"
204 "Format to display integer GIDs.")
205 (defvar ls-lisp-gid-s-fmt
"-%s"
206 "Format to display user group names.")
207 (defvar ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
"%d"
208 "Format to display integer file sizes.")
209 (defvar ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
"%.0f"
210 "Format to display float file sizes.")
211 (defvar ls-lisp-filesize-b-fmt
"%.0f"
212 "Format to display file sizes in blocks (for the -s switch).")
214 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
216 (defun ls-lisp--insert-directory (orig-fun file switches
&optional wildcard full-directory-p
)
217 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
218 Leaves point after the inserted text.
219 SWITCHES may be a string of options, or a list of strings.
220 Optional third arg WILDCARD means treat FILE as shell wildcard.
221 Optional fourth arg FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and
222 switches do not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected.
224 This version of the function comes from `ls-lisp.el'.
225 If the value of `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is non-nil then
226 this advice just delegates the work to ORIG-FUN (the normal `insert-directory'
227 function from `files.el').
228 But if the value of `ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program' is nil
229 then it runs a Lisp emulation.
231 The Lisp emulation does not run any external programs or shells. It
232 supports ordinary shell wildcards if `ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards'
233 is non-nil; otherwise, it interprets wildcards as regular expressions
234 to match file names. It does not support all `ls' switches -- those
235 that work are: A a B C c F G g h i n R r S s t U u X. The l switch
236 is assumed to be always present and cannot be turned off."
237 (if ls-lisp-use-insert-directory-program
239 file switches wildcard full-directory-p
)
240 ;; We need the directory in order to find the right handler.
241 (let ((handler (find-file-name-handler (expand-file-name file
)
246 (funcall handler
'insert-directory file switches
247 wildcard full-directory-p
)
248 ;; Remove --dired switch
249 (if (string-match "--dired " switches
)
250 (setq switches
(replace-match "" nil nil switches
)))
251 ;; Convert SWITCHES to a list of characters.
252 (setq switches
(delete ?\
(delete ?-
(append switches nil
))))
253 ;; Sometimes we get ".../foo*/" as FILE. While the shell and
254 ;; `ls' don't mind, we certainly do, because it makes us think
255 ;; there is no wildcard, only a directory name.
256 (if (and ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
257 (string-match "[[?*]" file
)
258 ;; Prefer an existing file to wildcards, like
259 ;; dired-noselect does.
260 (not (file-exists-p file
)))
262 (or (not (eq (aref file
(1- (length file
))) ?
/))
263 (setq file
(substring file
0 (1- (length file
)))))
266 (setq wildcard-regexp
267 (if ls-lisp-support-shell-wildcards
268 (wildcard-to-regexp (file-name-nondirectory file
))
269 (file-name-nondirectory file
))
270 file
(file-name-directory file
))
271 (if (memq ?B switches
) (setq wildcard-regexp
"[^~]\\'")))
273 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
274 file switches
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
)
275 wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
277 ;; Maybe they wanted a literal file that just happens to
278 ;; use characters special to shell wildcards.
279 (if (equal (cadr err
) "Unmatched [ or [^")
281 (setq wildcard-regexp
(if (memq ?B switches
) "[^~]\\'")
282 file
(file-relative-name orig-file
))
283 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
284 file switches
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
)
285 nil full-directory-p
))
286 (signal (car err
) (cdr err
)))))
287 ;; Try to insert the amount of free space.
289 (goto-char (point-min))
290 ;; First find the line to put it on.
291 (when (re-search-forward "^total" nil t
)
292 (let ((available (get-free-disk-space ".")))
294 ;; Replace "total" with "total used", to avoid confusion.
295 (replace-match "total used in directory")
297 (insert " available " available
)))))))))
298 (advice-add 'insert-directory
:around
#'ls-lisp--insert-directory
)
300 (defun ls-lisp-insert-directory
301 (file switches time-index wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
302 "Insert directory listing for FILE, formatted according to SWITCHES.
303 Leaves point after the inserted text. This is an internal function
304 optionally called by the `ls-lisp.el' version of `insert-directory'.
305 It is called recursively if the -R switch is used.
306 SWITCHES is a *list* of characters. TIME-INDEX is the time index into
307 file-attributes according to SWITCHES. WILDCARD-REGEXP is nil or an *Emacs
308 regexp*. FULL-DIRECTORY-P means file is a directory and SWITCHES does
309 not contain `d', so that a full listing is expected."
310 (if (or wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)
311 (let* ((dir (file-name-as-directory file
))
312 (default-directory dir
) ; so that file-attributes works
314 (directory-files-and-attributes dir nil wildcard-regexp t
315 (if (memq ?n switches
)
322 ;; do all bindings here for speed
323 total-line files elt short file-size attr
324 fuid fgid uid-len gid-len
)
325 (setq file-alist
(ls-lisp-sanitize file-alist
))
326 (cond ((memq ?A switches
)
328 (ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\.\\.?$" file-alist
)))
329 ((not (memq ?a switches
))
330 ;; if neither -A nor -a, flush . files
332 (ls-lisp-delete-matching "^\\." file-alist
))))
334 (ls-lisp-handle-switches file-alist switches
))
335 (if (memq ?C switches
) ; column (-C) format
336 (ls-lisp-column-format file-alist
)
337 (setq total-line
(cons (point) (car-safe file-alist
)))
338 ;; Find the appropriate format for displaying uid, gid, and
339 ;; file size, by finding the longest strings among all the
340 ;; files we are about to display.
341 (dolist (elt file-alist
)
344 uid-len
(if (stringp fuid
) (string-width fuid
)
345 (length (format "%d" fuid
)))
347 gid-len
(if (stringp fgid
) (string-width fgid
)
348 (length (format "%d" fgid
)))
349 file-size
(nth 7 attr
))
350 (if (> uid-len max-uid-len
)
351 (setq max-uid-len uid-len
))
352 (if (> gid-len max-gid-len
)
353 (setq max-gid-len gid-len
))
354 (if (> file-size max-file-size
)
355 (setq max-file-size file-size
)))
356 (setq ls-lisp-uid-d-fmt
(format " %%-%dd" max-uid-len
))
357 (setq ls-lisp-uid-s-fmt
(format " %%-%ds" max-uid-len
))
358 (setq ls-lisp-gid-d-fmt
(format " %%-%dd" max-gid-len
))
359 (setq ls-lisp-gid-s-fmt
(format " %%-%ds" max-gid-len
))
360 (setq ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
361 (format " %%%dd" (length (format "%.0f" max-file-size
))))
362 (setq ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
363 (format " %%%d.0f" (length (format "%.0f" max-file-size
))))
364 (if (memq ?s switches
)
365 (setq ls-lisp-filesize-b-fmt
367 (length (format "%.0f"
369 (/ max-file-size
1024.0)))))))
370 (setq files file-alist
)
371 (while files
; long (-l) format
372 (setq elt
(car files
)
376 file-size
(nth 7 attr
))
378 (setq sum
(+ file-size
379 ;; Even if neither SUM nor file's size
380 ;; overflow, their sum could.
381 (if (or (< sum
(- 134217727 file-size
))
386 (insert (ls-lisp-format short attr file-size
387 switches time-index
))))
388 ;; Insert total size of all files:
390 (goto-char (car total-line
))
392 ;; Shell says ``No match'' if no files match
393 ;; the wildcard; let's say something similar.
394 (insert "(No match)\n"))
395 (insert (format "total %.0f\n" (fceiling (/ sum
1024.0))))))
396 ;; dired-insert-directory expects to find point after the
397 ;; text. But if the listing is empty, as e.g. in empty
398 ;; directories with -a removed from switches, point will be
399 ;; before the inserted text, and dired-insert-directory will
400 ;; not indent the listing correctly. Going to the end of the
401 ;; buffer fixes that.
402 (unless files
(goto-char (point-max)))
403 (if (memq ?R switches
)
404 ;; List the contents of all directories recursively.
405 ;; cadr of each element of `file-alist' is t for
406 ;; directory, string (name linked to) for symbolic
409 (setq elt
(car file-alist
)
410 file-alist
(cdr file-alist
))
411 (when (and (eq (cadr elt
) t
) ; directory
412 ;; Under -F, we have already decorated all
413 ;; directories, including "." and "..", with
414 ;; a /, so allow for that as well.
415 (not (string-match "\\`\\.\\.?/?\\'" (car elt
))))
416 (setq elt
(expand-file-name (car elt
) dir
))
417 (insert "\n" elt
":\n")
418 (ls-lisp-insert-directory
419 elt switches time-index wildcard-regexp full-directory-p
)))))
420 ;; If not full-directory-p, FILE *must not* end in /, as
421 ;; file-attributes will not recognize a symlink to a directory,
422 ;; so must make it a relative filename as ls does:
423 (if (file-name-absolute-p file
) (setq file
(expand-file-name file
)))
424 (if (eq (aref file
(1- (length file
))) ?
/)
425 (setq file
(substring file
0 -
1)))
426 (let ((fattr (file-attributes file
'string
)))
428 (insert (ls-lisp-format
429 (if (memq ?F switches
)
430 (ls-lisp-classify-file file fattr
)
433 switches time-index
))
434 (message "%s: doesn't exist or is inaccessible" file
)
435 (ding) (sit-for 2))))) ; to show user the message!
437 (defun ls-lisp-sanitize (file-alist)
438 "Sanitize the elements in FILE-ALIST.
439 Fixes any elements in the alist for directory entries whose file
440 attributes are nil (meaning that `file-attributes' failed for
441 them). This is known to happen for some network shares, in
442 particular for the \"..\" directory entry.
444 If the \"..\" directory entry has nil attributes, the attributes
445 are copied from the \".\" entry, if they are non-nil. Otherwise,
446 the offending element is removed from the list, as are any
447 elements for other directory entries with nil attributes."
448 (if (and (null (cdr (assoc ".." file-alist
)))
449 (cdr (assoc "." file-alist
)))
450 (setcdr (assoc ".." file-alist
) (cdr (assoc "." file-alist
))))
451 (rassq-delete-all nil file-alist
))
453 (defun ls-lisp-column-format (file-alist)
454 "Insert the file names (only) in FILE-ALIST into the current buffer.
455 Format in columns, sorted vertically, following GNU ls -C.
456 Responds to the window width as ls should but may not!"
457 (let (files fmt ncols collen
(nfiles 0) (colwid 0))
458 ;; Count number of files as `nfiles', build list of filenames as
459 ;; `files', and find maximum filename length as `colwid':
462 (setq nfiles
(1+ nfiles
)
463 file
(caar file-alist
)
464 files
(cons file files
)
465 file-alist
(cdr file-alist
)
467 (if (> len colwid
) (setq colwid len
))))
468 (setq files
(nreverse files
)
469 colwid
(+ 2 colwid
) ; 2 character column gap
470 fmt
(format "%%-%ds" colwid
) ; print format
471 ncols
(/ (window-width) colwid
) ; no of columns
472 collen
(/ nfiles ncols
)) ; floor of column length
473 (if (> nfiles
(* collen ncols
)) (setq collen
(1+ collen
)))
474 ;; Output the file names in columns, sorted vertically:
479 (insert (format fmt
(nth j files
)))
480 (setq j
(+ j collen
)))
481 ;; FJW: This is completely unnecessary, but I don't like
482 ;; trailing white space...
483 (delete-region (point) (progn (skip-chars-backward " \t") (point)))
487 (defun ls-lisp-delete-matching (regexp list
)
488 "Delete all elements matching REGEXP from LIST, return new list."
489 ;; Should perhaps use setcdr for efficiency.
492 (or (string-match regexp
(caar list
))
493 (setq result
(cons (car list
) result
)))
494 (setq list
(cdr list
)))
497 (defsubst ls-lisp-string-lessp
(s1 s2
)
498 "Return t if string S1 is less than string S2 in lexicographic order.
499 Case is significant if `ls-lisp-ignore-case' is nil.
500 Unibyte strings are converted to multibyte for comparison."
501 (let ((u (compare-strings s1
0 nil s2
0 nil ls-lisp-ignore-case
)))
502 (and (numberp u
) (< u
0))))
504 (defun ls-lisp-handle-switches (file-alist switches
)
505 "Return new FILE-ALIST sorted according to SWITCHES.
506 SWITCHES is a list of characters. Default sorting is alphabetic."
507 ;; FILE-ALIST's elements are (FILE . FILE-ATTRIBUTES).
508 (or (memq ?U switches
) ; unsorted
509 ;; Catch and ignore unexpected sorting errors
513 ;; Copy file-alist in case of error
514 (sort (copy-sequence file-alist
) ; modifies its argument!
515 (cond ((memq ?S switches
)
516 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on size
517 ;; 7th file attribute is file size
518 ;; Make largest file come first
521 ((setq index
(ls-lisp-time-index switches
))
522 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on time
523 (time-less-p (nth index
(cdr y
))
524 (nth index
(cdr x
)))))
526 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted on extension
527 (ls-lisp-string-lessp
528 (ls-lisp-extension (car x
))
529 (ls-lisp-extension (car y
)))))
531 (lambda (x y
) ; sorted alphabetically
532 (ls-lisp-string-lessp (car x
) (car y
))))))))
533 (error (message "Unsorted (ls-lisp sorting error) - %s"
534 (error-message-string err
))
535 (ding) (sit-for 2)))) ; to show user the message!
536 (if (memq ?F switches
) ; classify switch
537 (setq file-alist
(mapcar 'ls-lisp-classify file-alist
)))
538 (if ls-lisp-dirs-first
539 ;; Re-sort directories first, without otherwise changing the
540 ;; ordering, and reverse whole list. cadr of each element of
541 ;; `file-alist' is t for directory, string (name linked to) for
542 ;; symbolic link, or nil.
545 (if (or (eq (cadr (setq el
(car file-alist
))) t
) ; directory
546 (and (stringp (cadr el
))
547 (file-directory-p (cadr el
)))) ; symlink to a directory
548 (setq dirs
(cons el dirs
))
549 (setq files
(cons el files
)))
550 (setq file-alist
(cdr file-alist
)))
552 (if (memq ?U switches
) ; unsorted order is reversed
556 ;; Finally reverse file alist if necessary.
557 ;; (eq below MUST compare `(not (memq ...))' to force comparison of
558 ;; `t' or `nil', rather than list tails!)
559 (if (eq (eq (not (memq ?U switches
)) ; unsorted order is reversed
560 (not (memq ?r switches
))) ; reversed sort order requested
561 ls-lisp-dirs-first
) ; already reversed
562 (nreverse file-alist
)
565 (defun ls-lisp-classify-file (filename fattr
)
566 "Append a character to FILENAME indicating the file type.
568 FATTR is the file attributes returned by `file-attributes' for the file.
569 The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
570 links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, `*' for regular files that
571 are executable, and nothing for other types of files."
572 (let* ((type (car fattr
))
573 (modestr (nth 8 fattr
))
574 (typestr (substring modestr
0 1)))
577 (concat filename
(if (eq type t
) "/" "@")))
578 ((string-match "x" modestr
)
579 (concat filename
"*"))
580 ((string= "p" typestr
)
581 (concat filename
"|"))
582 ((string= "s" typestr
)
583 (concat filename
"="))
586 (defun ls-lisp-classify (filedata)
587 "Append a character to file name in FILEDATA indicating the file type.
589 FILEDATA has the form (FILENAME . ATTRIBUTES), where ATTRIBUTES is the
590 structure returned by `file-attributes' for that file.
592 The file type indicators are `/' for directories, `@' for symbolic
593 links, `|' for FIFOs, `=' for sockets, `*' for regular files that
594 are executable, and nothing for other types of files."
595 (let ((file-name (car filedata
))
596 (fattr (cdr filedata
)))
597 (setq file-name
(propertize file-name
'dired-filename t
))
598 (cons (ls-lisp-classify-file file-name fattr
) fattr
)))
600 (defun ls-lisp-extension (filename)
601 "Return extension of FILENAME (ignoring any version extension)
602 FOLLOWED by null and full filename, SOLELY for full alpha sort."
603 ;; Force extension sort order: `no ext' then `null ext' then `ext'
604 ;; to agree with GNU ls.
606 (let* ((i (length filename
)) end
)
607 (if (= (aref filename
(1- i
)) ?.
) ; null extension
609 (while (and (>= (setq i
(1- i
)) 0)
610 (/= (aref filename i
) ?.
)))
611 (if (< i
0) "\0\0" ; no extension
612 (if (/= (aref filename
(1+ i
)) ?~
)
613 (substring filename
(1+ i
))
614 ;; version extension found -- ignore it
616 (while (and (>= (setq i
(1- i
)) 0)
617 (/= (aref filename i
) ?.
)))
618 (if (< i
0) "\0\0" ; no extension
619 (substring filename
(1+ i
) end
))))
622 (defun ls-lisp-format (file-name file-attr file-size switches time-index
)
623 "Format one line of long ls output for file FILE-NAME.
624 FILE-ATTR and FILE-SIZE give the file's attributes and size.
625 SWITCHES and TIME-INDEX give the full switch list and time data."
626 (let ((file-type (nth 0 file-attr
))
627 ;; t for directory, string (name linked to)
628 ;; for symbolic link, or nil.
629 (drwxrwxrwx (nth 8 file-attr
))) ; attribute string ("drwxrwxrwx")
630 (concat (if (memq ?i switches
) ; inode number
631 (let ((inode (nth 10 file-attr
)))
633 (if (consp (cdr inode
))
634 ;; 2^(24+16) = 1099511627776.0, but
635 ;; multiplying by it and then adding the
636 ;; other members of the cons cell in one go
637 ;; loses precision, since a double does not
638 ;; have enough significant digits to hold a
639 ;; full 64-bit value. So below we split
640 ;; 1099511627776 into high 13 and low 5
641 ;; digits and compute in two parts.
642 (let ((p1 (* (car inode
) 10995116.0))
643 (p2 (+ (* (car inode
) 27776.0)
644 (* (cadr inode
) 65536.0)
646 (format " %13.0f%05.0f "
647 ;; Use floor to emulate integer
649 (+ p1
(floor p2
100000.0))
652 (+ (* (car inode
) 65536.0)
654 (format " %18d " inode
))))
655 ;; nil is treated like "" in concat
656 (if (memq ?s switches
) ; size in K, rounded up
657 ;; In GNU ls, -h affects the size in blocks, displayed
659 (if (memq ?h switches
)
661 (file-size-human-readable
662 ;; We use 1K as "block size", although
663 ;; most Windows volumes use 4KB to 8KB
664 ;; clusters, and exFAT will usually have
665 ;; clusters of 32KB or even 128KB. See
666 ;; KB article 140365 for the details.
667 (* 1024.0 (fceiling (/ file-size
1024.0)))))
668 (format ls-lisp-filesize-b-fmt
669 (fceiling (/ file-size
1024.0)))))
670 drwxrwxrwx
; attribute string
671 (if (memq 'links ls-lisp-verbosity
)
672 (format "%3d" (nth 1 file-attr
))) ; link count
673 ;; Numeric uid/gid are more confusing than helpful;
674 ;; Emacs should be able to make strings of them.
675 ;; They tend to be bogus on non-UNIX platforms anyway so
676 ;; optionally hide them.
677 (if (memq 'uid ls-lisp-verbosity
)
678 ;; uid can be a string or an integer
679 (let ((uid (nth 2 file-attr
)))
680 (format (if (stringp uid
)
684 (if (not (memq ?G switches
)) ; GNU ls -- shows group by default
685 (if (or (memq ?g switches
) ; UNIX ls -- no group by default
686 (memq 'gid ls-lisp-verbosity
))
687 (let ((gid (nth 3 file-attr
)))
688 (format (if (stringp gid
)
692 (ls-lisp-format-file-size file-size
(memq ?h switches
))
694 (ls-lisp-format-time file-attr time-index
)
696 (if (not (memq ?F switches
)) ; ls-lisp-classify already did that
697 (propertize file-name
'dired-filename t
)
699 (if (stringp file-type
) ; is a symbolic link
700 (concat " -> " file-type
))
704 (defun ls-lisp-time-index (switches)
705 "Return time index into file-attributes according to ls SWITCHES list.
706 Return nil if no time switch found."
707 ;; FJW: Default of nil is IMPORTANT and used in `ls-lisp-handle-switches'!
708 (cond ((memq ?c switches
) 6) ; last mode change
709 ((memq ?t switches
) 5) ; last modtime
710 ((memq ?u switches
) 4))) ; last access
712 (defun ls-lisp-format-time (file-attr time-index
)
713 "Format time for file with attributes FILE-ATTR according to TIME-INDEX.
714 Use the same method as ls to decide whether to show time-of-day or year,
715 depending on distance between file date and the current time.
716 All ls time options, namely c, t and u, are handled."
717 (let* ((time (nth (or time-index
5) file-attr
)) ; default is last modtime
718 (diff (- (float-time time
) (float-time)))
719 ;; Consider a time to be recent if it is within the past six
720 ;; months. A Gregorian year has 365.2425 * 24 * 60 * 60 ==
721 ;; 31556952 seconds on the average, and half of that is 15778476.
722 ;; Write the constant explicitly to avoid roundoff error.
723 (past-cutoff -
15778476)) ; half a Gregorian year
725 ;; Use traditional time format in the C or POSIX locale,
726 ;; ISO-style time format otherwise, so columns line up.
727 (let ((locale system-time-locale
))
729 (let ((vars '("LC_ALL" "LC_TIME" "LANG")))
730 (while (and vars
(not (setq locale
(getenv (car vars
)))))
731 (setq vars
(cdr vars
)))))
732 (if (member locale
'("C" "POSIX"))
735 (if (and (<= past-cutoff diff
) (<= diff
0))
736 (if (and locale
(not ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format
))
738 (nth 0 ls-lisp-format-time-list
))
739 (if (and locale
(not ls-lisp-use-localized-time-format
))
741 (nth 1 ls-lisp-format-time-list
)))
743 (error "Unk 0 0000"))))
745 (defun ls-lisp-format-file-size (file-size human-readable
)
746 (if (not human-readable
)
747 (format (if (floatp file-size
)
748 ls-lisp-filesize-f-fmt
749 ls-lisp-filesize-d-fmt
)
751 (format " %6s" (file-size-human-readable file-size
))))
755 ;;; ls-lisp.el ends here